“The true test of character is not how much we know how to do, but how we behave when we don’t know what to do.”, Jon Holt
“For many people, one of the most frustrating aspects of life is not being able to understand other people’s behavior.”, Uknown
“Behavior is a mirror in which every one displays his own image”, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Making Friends is a landmark on a long journey I started towards understanding and illustrating human interaction. This journey began with a frustration with the social and cultural behaviors I was observing and their impact on me as a person and as an artist. Issues such as segregation on racial and financial basis, gentrification, immigration, etc. seemed to tint reality with dark colors. Eventually I moved to a different place, where I observed different situation and experienced a different feeling. There was more happiness around me; it changed the way I perceived the world. This change led to exploration of various topics and mediums – the impact of one’s action over another, the chain reaction effect, communication tools, facial expression, body language and transactions between humans – both verbal and non-verbal, language as a bridge and a as barrier, empathy, sympathy, awareness of one’s actions, encounters with strangers, self-evaluation and so on.
Making Friends took on its shape to deliver the same experience I’ve been going through, to entertain and puzzle at the same time. It talks about the patience one needs to have in order to completely understand and appreciate an entity or an idea. It provides the settings to test and reenact the moments of curiosity, social awkwardness, rejection and acceptance. It explores the issues of trying to connect with others and negotiating the space; it reflects on the general way people react to the unfamiliar or unidentified presence.
Making Friends is an interactive video piece that resembles a place where two strangers might meet. It includes a bench with a mirror placed on the wall. A strange persona exists in the reflection in the mirror. Once a person sits on the bench the mysterious image tries to interact with the person sitting. The scenario of the interaction changes over time and is influenced by the behavior of the user, and, more specifically, by the amount of time the user is interested in participating in the interaction.
“Making friends” re-imagines the settings of getting into a moment in which we let other people influence our opinion. It makes us evaluate our actions or try to see them through other people’s eyes; our inner drives also try to communicate with us but they become dominant only if we allow them to, in other words, if we are in the right mindset. “Making friends” gives the power to the user to unravel every step of this process and make it a meaningful experience.
And another one. The idea behind is that this would play first and after a number of interactions the speech would become understandable. 3 by tsvetadi
Improved code tremendously. Used Vade’s tips hot to optimize for hi res video. http://abstrakt.vade.info/?p=147 (I am projecting 720p)
Installed the piece and presented. I got similar feedback – a lot of people were interested int the image. I was mostly happy with the fact that people were interpreting the ghostly image in many different ways. Also important feedback was that the camera hole, positioned in the middle of the frame, didn’t bother the majority.
I decided to focus on the visuals and eliminate the audio, which never felt like part of the piece.
I concluded I need to record more videos and gestures.